Consumers in the UK are being told to “go green” while quietly being handed a larger bill. Coincidence? Sometimes. Convenient? Almost always. The reality sits somewhere between genuine environmental progress and a very polished marketing strategy.


The Rise of “Green Pricing” in the UK

What is the “green premium”?

The “green premium” refers to the extra cost consumers pay for products marketed as environmentally friendly.

According to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), demand for sustainable products has surged, but so has price inflation tied to green claims.

In simple terms:

  • “Eco” often = higher price
  • But not always = higher environmental value

Why it feels like everything costs more

UK consumers are seeing:

  • Organic food priced 20–100% higher
  • “Sustainable” clothing costing significantly more
  • Eco cleaning products at premium price points

A report referenced by Which? found that many shoppers struggle to tell the difference between genuinely sustainable products and those simply marketed that way.

So yes, your suspicion isn’t entirely misplaced. Some of it is real. Some of it is branding with a leaf icon slapped on.


When “Eco” Is Just Marketing (Greenwashing in Plain Sight)

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The greenwashing problem

The CMA found that around 40% of environmental claims made online could be misleading.

That’s not a rounding error. That’s almost half.

Typical tricks include:

  • Vague terms like “eco-friendly” or “natural”
  • Highlighting one green aspect while ignoring bigger impacts
  • Using colours and imagery (green packaging, leaves, earthy tones) to imply sustainability

Expert insight

The CMA stated:

“Businesses must not give misleading impressions about the environmental impact of their products.”
(CMA Green Claims Code)

Which sounds obvious… until you realise how often it happens anyway.

Why it works

Consumers:

  • Want to make better choices
  • Have limited time to research
  • Trust labels more than they should

So companies don’t need to lie outright. They just need to suggest.


When the Green Premium Is Actually Justified

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Now for the inconvenient part: sometimes the higher price is completely legitimate.

Higher production costs

Sustainable products often cost more because:

  • Ethical labour standards increase costs
  • Smaller production scales reduce efficiency
  • Better materials (organic, recycled, low-impact) are more expensive

For example:

  • Organic farming avoids synthetic pesticides → lower yields → higher prices
  • Ethical fashion avoids exploitative labour → higher wages → higher retail cost

Energy transition costs

Renewable energy, while cheaper long-term, requires:

  • Infrastructure investment
  • Grid upgrades
  • Storage systems

The National Grid has repeatedly highlighted that transitioning to net zero involves significant upfront investment.

So yes, some of your energy bill increases aren’t imaginary. They’re the cost of rebuilding the system.


The Government Factor: Policy or Profit Lever?

Taxes, levies and incentives

The UK government uses:

  • Carbon pricing
  • Environmental levies
  • Subsidies for renewables

to push behaviour change.

Critics argue this creates:

  • Higher consumer costs
  • Limited short-term benefit

Supporters argue:

  • It’s necessary to meet climate targets
  • Costs now prevent bigger costs later

Expert perspective

The Climate Change Committee states that:

“The costs of inaction on climate change would far outweigh the costs of action.”

That’s the official line. Whether it feels true when you’re paying £6 for “eco washing-up liquid” is another matter entirely.


The Consumer Reality: Paying More, Feeling Unsure

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Trust is eroding

Consumers are increasingly:

  • Sceptical of green claims
  • Frustrated by higher prices
  • Unsure what actually helps the environment

A survey highlighted by Deloitte found many UK consumers want to act sustainably but feel priced out of doing so.

The emotional contradiction

People are told:

  • “Save the planet”

While experiencing:

  • Higher costs of living
  • Confusing product claims
  • Limited transparency

It creates a strange dynamic where:

  • Consumers feel guilty not buying eco
  • But resent paying for it

A perfect recipe for cynicism.


Where the Illusion Ends (And Reality Begins)

Genuine eco value tends to have these traits

  • Clear, specific claims (not vague slogans)
  • Third-party certification (e.g. FSC, Energy Star equivalents)
  • Transparent sourcing or production details

Red flags for greenwashing

  • Buzzwords without evidence
  • Overly broad claims (“100% eco”)
  • Premium pricing with no clear explanation

The uncomfortable truth

Some “eco pricing” is:

  • Legitimate cost recovery

Some is:

  • Strategic pricing because people will pay more

And some is:

  • Pure marketing dressed up as morality

Final Verdict: Illusion, Reality… or Both?

The balanced answer

Eco-friendly pricing in the UK is not a scam.
But it’s also not always honest or proportionate.

✔ Real costs exist
✔ Real environmental benefits exist

But also:

✖ Marketing exaggeration is widespread
✖ Pricing sometimes exploits consumer goodwill
✖ Transparency is often lacking

The real takeaway

You’re not imagining the price difference.
You’re just expected to figure out which ones are justified… with minimal help.


Sources and Further Reading


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